Deena Applebury, coach of the women’s basketball team, is the Atlantic Region women’s basketball coach of the year. Applebury led the Eagles to a 30–1 record and a trip to the NCAA Division III tournament’s Elite Eight.
Mindy Erchull Presents at Association for Women in Psychology Meeting
Mindy Erchull, associate professor of psychology, presented a poster at the annual meeting of the Association for Women in Psychology entitled “A Traditional Shift? Differences in Beliefs and Behaviors Among Feminist Mothers and Non-Mothers” on which Miriam Liss served as co-author. Erchull also helped facilitate two structured discussions: “Live to Tell: The Experiences of Early Career Feminists” and “ Early Career Research: Fitting it All In.”
Stephen Farnsworth Published in Politics & Policy Journal
Stephen J. Farnsworth, professor of political science and director of the university’s Center for Leadership and Media Studies, is co-author of a refereed research article entitled, “News Coverage of New Presidents in the New York Times, 1981-2009,” published in the February 2012 issue of Politics & Policy.
UMW Web Team Invited to Speak at ACCS Conference
On March 14, UMW’s Web team, Cathy Finn-Derecki and Curtiss Grymala, were invited to lead a discussion group on University Web Redesign Projects at the annual ACCS Conference (Association of College Computing Services). Representatives in attendance included web developers and designers from public colleges and universities throughout Virginia.
It was clear that the UMW web project was among the most ambitious attempted in recent history in the Commonwealth. The team discussed the strategic planning process, design and marketing, and, of course, WordPress. UMW continues to make a strong impression among colleague institutions with our innovative thinking regarding this ambitious redesign and migration. Work at UMW, and our contributions to the WordPress developer community, are helping to further WordPress’s viability as an enterprise content management system.
DTLT Controls the Vertical and the Horizontal
In January the DTLT group presented at the Educause Midatlantic Regional Conference in Baltimore, Maryland. The panel discussion covered the Digital Storytelling class being taught here at UMW, affectionately know as ds106. Martha Burtis provided an overview of the course, Tim Owens the technical framework, I featured the radio, and Andy Rush closed with our experiments with live, streaming video. It’s not only a great overview of ds106, but it is also a great overview of the chemistry that drives the creative, innovative machine that is DTLT.
Jim Groom Published in Debates in the Digital Humanities
Jim Groom, Director of Teaching and Learning Technologies, published a co-authored piece with Matt Gold in the recently publishing anthology Debates in the Digital Humanities titled “Looking for Whitman: A Grand Aggregated Experiment.” According to the University of Minnesota Press this volume
….brings together leading figures in the field to explore its theories, methods, and practices and to clarify its multiple possibilities and tensions. Together, the essays—which will be published later as an ongoing, open-access website—suggest that the digital humanities is uniquely positioned to contribute to the revival of the humanities and academic life.
Beth Perkins Retires from Simpson Library
On March 1, Beth Perkins retired from her position as Head of Circulation at UMW Libraries. During her 28 years at UMW she not only supervised both students and full-time employees, but planned for and helped administer library programs and services. In the late 1980s she assisted with the transition from a card catalog to an online catalog and was often referred to as “Beta-Test Beth” for her ability to spot problems with a complex automated system. For years she was an active member of the Virginia Library Association’s Paraprofessional Forum, and in 1996 she received the organization’s inaugural Paraprofessional of the Year award. Four years later she received Library Journal’s first Paraprofessional of the Year award, the criteria of which included “contribution(s) enabling the library to best serve its constituents and/or its community.” In nominating Beth for this prestigious, national honor, Systems Librarian Bob Grattan wrote that “her leadership on the job is always strong, and she brings experience and excellent skills to her staff. Her professionalism is underlined by her extensive training and her experience working with her peers in several organizations.” Beth likes to travel and is fanatical about her music, so now that she’s retired, she intends to travel where the music is and attend concerts and festivals around the country.
Tuesday, March 20: Free Women’s History Month Lecture, “Women and Politics in the Era of the American Revolution”
Despite their formal exclusion from politics, women played a central role in securing American independence. This talk will discuss the individual contributions of women such as Mercy Otis Warren, Esther de Berdt Reed, and Phillis Wheatley, as well as women’s collective forms of participation before, during and after the American Revolution. It will also examine the changing meaning of “women’s rights” in the era of the Revolution.
Noted historian Rosemarie Zagarri, professor of history at George Mason University, will deliver this free public lecture as part of UMW’s Women’s History Month celebrations. The lecture will be co-sponsored by the James Monroe Museum, the UMW Department of History and American Studies and UMW’s Women’s and Gender Studies Program. A dessert reception will follow.
7 p.m. in the Great Hall, Woodard Campus Center. Free and open to the public. Contact auphaus@umw.edu with questions. Download the program flyer.
Charles Shields Featured in Virginia Living Magazine
Charles J. Shields, associate director of the Chappell Great Lives Lecture Series, is featured in the April 2012 issue of Virginia Living Magazine. The article is a review of Shields’ biography of Kurt Vonnegut.
The biography also is included in a London Times Literary Supplement review of recent works about Vonnegut.
UMW Eagles to Host NCAA Sectionals This Weekend
The undefeated UMW women’s basketball team will host the sectional rounds of the NCAA Division III Championship Tournament in Fredericksburg on Friday, March 9 and Saturday, March 10. On Friday, George Fox University will take on Bowdoin College at 5 p.m., with Mary Washington facing Lebanon Valley College at 7 p.m. On Saturday, March 10, the two winners will meet with a trip to the Final Four on the line.
The seventh-ranked UMW team beat Messiah College in the second round of the tournament on Saturday, March 3.
Tickets for each day will cost $7 for adults and $4 for students. Senior citizens and all UMW faculty, staff and students with a valid I.D. will be admitted free of charge.